Clinicians are poor raters of life-expectancy before radical prostatectomy or definitive radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer.

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Clinicians are poor raters of life-expectancy before radical prostatectomy or definitive radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer. / Walz, Jochen; Gallina, Andrea; Perrotte, Paul; Jeldres, Claudio; Trinh, Quoc-Dien; Hutterer, Georg C; Traumann, Miriam; Ramirez, Alvaro; Shariat, Shahrokh F; McCormack, Michael; Perreault, Jean-Paul; Bénard, Francois; Valiquette, Luc; Saad, Fred; Karakiewicz, Pierre I.

In: BJU INT, Vol. 100, No. 6, 6, 2007, p. 1254-1258.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Walz, J, Gallina, A, Perrotte, P, Jeldres, C, Trinh, Q-D, Hutterer, GC, Traumann, M, Ramirez, A, Shariat, SF, McCormack, M, Perreault, J-P, Bénard, F, Valiquette, L, Saad, F & Karakiewicz, PI 2007, 'Clinicians are poor raters of life-expectancy before radical prostatectomy or definitive radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer.', BJU INT, vol. 100, no. 6, 6, pp. 1254-1258. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17979925?dopt=Citation>

APA

Walz, J., Gallina, A., Perrotte, P., Jeldres, C., Trinh, Q-D., Hutterer, G. C., Traumann, M., Ramirez, A., Shariat, S. F., McCormack, M., Perreault, J-P., Bénard, F., Valiquette, L., Saad, F., & Karakiewicz, P. I. (2007). Clinicians are poor raters of life-expectancy before radical prostatectomy or definitive radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer. BJU INT, 100(6), 1254-1258. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17979925?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Walz J, Gallina A, Perrotte P, Jeldres C, Trinh Q-D, Hutterer GC et al. Clinicians are poor raters of life-expectancy before radical prostatectomy or definitive radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer. BJU INT. 2007;100(6):1254-1258. 6.

Bibtex

@article{df599130a907414a808be8cd65afade1,
title = "Clinicians are poor raters of life-expectancy before radical prostatectomy or definitive radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer.",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: To test the accuracy of predicting life-expectancy (LE) among 19 raters, as the accurate prediction of LE in candidates for definitive therapy for localized prostate cancer is crucial, and little is known of the ability of clinicians to predict LE. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We randomly selected the case-vignettes of 50 patients treated with either radical prostatectomy (RP, 25) or external beam radiotherapy (EBRT, 25) for prostate cancer, and who either survived for > 10 years or died earlier with no evidence of disease relapse. The median age at treatment was 67 years and the median Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) was 2. The raters consisted of urology staff (six), urology residents (10) and medical students (three). The case-vignettes included patient age, comorbidities and CCI score, and raters were asked to predict the survival at 10 years (yes vs no), assuming no disease relapse. RESULTS: Of the 50 cases, 20 (40%) did not survive for > 10 years; clinicians estimated a mean (range) of 23 (10-35) deaths before 10 years. The mean (95% confidence interval) overall predictive accuracy (0.5 = chance, 1.0 = perfect prediction) of LE predictions was 0.68 (0.64-0.71). Individual accuracy ranged from 0.52 (staff) to 0.78 (staff). There were no important differences among the rater groups (residents 0.69 vs staff 0.67 vs medical students 0.67). CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians are relatively poor at predicting LE; tools to predict LE might be able to improve clinicians' performance in this important part of decision-making about prostate cancer treatment. It remains to be determined whether this limitation exclusively applies to prostate cancer or also to other malignancies.",
author = "Jochen Walz and Andrea Gallina and Paul Perrotte and Claudio Jeldres and Quoc-Dien Trinh and Hutterer, {Georg C} and Miriam Traumann and Alvaro Ramirez and Shariat, {Shahrokh F} and Michael McCormack and Jean-Paul Perreault and Francois B{\'e}nard and Luc Valiquette and Fred Saad and Karakiewicz, {Pierre I}",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "100",
pages = "1254--1258",
journal = "BJU INT",
issn = "1464-4096",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Clinicians are poor raters of life-expectancy before radical prostatectomy or definitive radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer.

AU - Walz, Jochen

AU - Gallina, Andrea

AU - Perrotte, Paul

AU - Jeldres, Claudio

AU - Trinh, Quoc-Dien

AU - Hutterer, Georg C

AU - Traumann, Miriam

AU - Ramirez, Alvaro

AU - Shariat, Shahrokh F

AU - McCormack, Michael

AU - Perreault, Jean-Paul

AU - Bénard, Francois

AU - Valiquette, Luc

AU - Saad, Fred

AU - Karakiewicz, Pierre I

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - OBJECTIVE: To test the accuracy of predicting life-expectancy (LE) among 19 raters, as the accurate prediction of LE in candidates for definitive therapy for localized prostate cancer is crucial, and little is known of the ability of clinicians to predict LE. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We randomly selected the case-vignettes of 50 patients treated with either radical prostatectomy (RP, 25) or external beam radiotherapy (EBRT, 25) for prostate cancer, and who either survived for > 10 years or died earlier with no evidence of disease relapse. The median age at treatment was 67 years and the median Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) was 2. The raters consisted of urology staff (six), urology residents (10) and medical students (three). The case-vignettes included patient age, comorbidities and CCI score, and raters were asked to predict the survival at 10 years (yes vs no), assuming no disease relapse. RESULTS: Of the 50 cases, 20 (40%) did not survive for > 10 years; clinicians estimated a mean (range) of 23 (10-35) deaths before 10 years. The mean (95% confidence interval) overall predictive accuracy (0.5 = chance, 1.0 = perfect prediction) of LE predictions was 0.68 (0.64-0.71). Individual accuracy ranged from 0.52 (staff) to 0.78 (staff). There were no important differences among the rater groups (residents 0.69 vs staff 0.67 vs medical students 0.67). CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians are relatively poor at predicting LE; tools to predict LE might be able to improve clinicians' performance in this important part of decision-making about prostate cancer treatment. It remains to be determined whether this limitation exclusively applies to prostate cancer or also to other malignancies.

AB - OBJECTIVE: To test the accuracy of predicting life-expectancy (LE) among 19 raters, as the accurate prediction of LE in candidates for definitive therapy for localized prostate cancer is crucial, and little is known of the ability of clinicians to predict LE. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We randomly selected the case-vignettes of 50 patients treated with either radical prostatectomy (RP, 25) or external beam radiotherapy (EBRT, 25) for prostate cancer, and who either survived for > 10 years or died earlier with no evidence of disease relapse. The median age at treatment was 67 years and the median Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) was 2. The raters consisted of urology staff (six), urology residents (10) and medical students (three). The case-vignettes included patient age, comorbidities and CCI score, and raters were asked to predict the survival at 10 years (yes vs no), assuming no disease relapse. RESULTS: Of the 50 cases, 20 (40%) did not survive for > 10 years; clinicians estimated a mean (range) of 23 (10-35) deaths before 10 years. The mean (95% confidence interval) overall predictive accuracy (0.5 = chance, 1.0 = perfect prediction) of LE predictions was 0.68 (0.64-0.71). Individual accuracy ranged from 0.52 (staff) to 0.78 (staff). There were no important differences among the rater groups (residents 0.69 vs staff 0.67 vs medical students 0.67). CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians are relatively poor at predicting LE; tools to predict LE might be able to improve clinicians' performance in this important part of decision-making about prostate cancer treatment. It remains to be determined whether this limitation exclusively applies to prostate cancer or also to other malignancies.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 100

SP - 1254

EP - 1258

JO - BJU INT

JF - BJU INT

SN - 1464-4096

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -